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North Korea has new nuclear plant: U.S. scientist

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Plant has thousands of centrifuges

Appears to be for civilian use

 

 

 

 

 

 

SEOUL: In secret and with remarkable speed, North Korea has built a new, highly sophisticated facility to enrich uranium, according to an American nuclear scientist, raising fears that the North is ramping up its atomic programme despite international pressure.

The scientist, Siegfried Hecker, said in a report posted on Saturday that he was taken during a recent trip to the North's main Yongbyon atomic complex to a small industrial-scale uranium enrichment facility. It had 2,000 recently completed centrifuges, he said, and the North told him it was producing low-enriched uranium meant for a new reactor. He described his first glimpse of the new centrifuges as “stunning”. Mr. Hecker, a former director of the U.S. Los Alamos Nuclear Laboratory who is regularly given rare glimpses of the North's secretive nuclear programme, acknowledged that it was not clear what North Korea stood to gain by showing him the formerly secret area.

The revelation could be designed to strengthen the North Korean government as it looks to transfer power from leader Kim Jong Il to a young, unproven son. As Washington and others tighten sanctions, unveiling the centrifuges could also be an attempt by Pyongyang to force a resumption of stalled international nuclear disarmament-for-aid talks.


The North told Mr. Hecker it began construction on the centrifuges in April 2009 and finished only a few days before the scientist's November 12 visit. “Instead of seeing a few small cascades of centrifuges, which I believed to exist in North Korea, we saw a modern, clean centrifuge plant of more than a thousand centrifuges, all neatly aligned and plumbed below us,” Mr. Hecker, a Stanford University professor, wrote. The facilities appeared to be primarily for civilian nuclear power, not for North Korea's nuclear arsenal, Mr. Hecker said. He saw no evidence of continued plutonium production at Yongbyon. — AP

 

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